66 1'3 .,1. · Sì / ---- ---- By GEORGE R. STEWART Author of S?ðí The story of how American place names came to be. SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE: UUnquestion- ably on its way to beéoming a classic . . . Wholly fascinating." N. Y. TIMES: uW onderfuI .. A lavish feast of history, humor, poetry, and patriotism, stirred together with zest and abandon." 418 pages, $3.00 THE ITY 0 F -ere' ves By WALTER VAN TILBURG CLARK The new novel by the author of THE OX-BOW INCIDENT ... N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNE BOOK REVIEW: HpOS_ sesses a magic all its own" CHICAGO NEWS: "To read it is to be young again. Seldom does one have the good for- tune to encounter anything like its sheer artistry:- 690 pages, $3.00 ! (trang r By RICHARD , · - {lr TREGASKIS ''1h{lJ!..J. ; A nov; ltZ::í .. .! .. 6uadalcana1 : '" ; ..-.JI'''- . ..' ,,',' ç þ-'" I " Di s. : , . ' ,' ,,' f/'l'f!.lli . ary .A N' .1 {l lìJ- .. ,..,..... / Ittl . ...L t' J 41t" " . .4'"' t' - .' . t' -4'''::J_',.J ....l'I,.J\ 4. ,1"1' ": HARPER'S: "Magnificent as a picture of what , the soldiers live through day after day." N. Y. TIMES: uA real book, grimly honest, but with beauty and consolation in it." $2.00 NDOM HOUSE, 20 E. 57.'51., N. Y. 22, N. Y. time it makes the testimony of Barmine widely available in English. I first read this book when it came out in French, not long after I had tak- en a trip to Russia, and it seemed to me the most illuminating document that had been published on the Soviet Union in its then perpleJång later phases. It still seems to me unique and indispensa- ble. For a foreigner who wants really to learn what has been happening of recent years in Russia-as distinguished from demanding support either for faith or for hostile prejudice-this is probably he one book that ought to be read if you have time for no other book. One of the great obstacles to general under- standing of the development of the new Russia has been the difficulty, for peo- ple in the \\T est, of understanding how quickly ,and hO\\T frequently the official Soviet policy has changed, and how deeply these changes in policy have affected the life of Russian society. Most people have several of these phases mixed up in their conception of the Sovi- ets, selecting the best or the worst fea- tures of each to flatter their precon- ceived points of view. Now Barmine takes you through the whole story. Born in 1899, the son of a schoolmaster and a gamekeeper's daughter, he took part as a boy in the civil wars, was made a commissar at nineteen on the basis of his success in getting food from the vil- lagers by persuasion and honorable deal- ing at a time when Red Army soldiers rarely came back from such errands alive, and attended the Red Army Academy in the years when old Czarist officers, recruited to the Revolution, were trying rather skeprically to trans- form "a lot of young peasants and workmen into infantry officers in six months," while their training was at any moment likely to be interrupted by the necessity of going away to take part in some actual fighting. And he later saw the years when officials lived in magnificent country houses which the populace were not allowed to approach. He knew the era when, as in 1 91 9, "the most critical year of the Civil \V ar," it was possihle, fifty miles from the battle, for a public debate to take place, with- out "passing the bounds of courtesy," between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks; and he knew the period when, in time of peace, men were immediately ar- rested and shot for questioning privately any measure of the government's. \Vhat life looked like to a Soviet official dur- ing these and all the intermediate stages, what he thought about and what he did, how he explains the transformation of the Russia of the Leninist idealism into In a f/lliet St. LOllis looming hOIlS ,,>,;0; these Þ e(J.hlølf 4rii'i , /', 1! ! -Þ. ' ,; I , I-L ...'% ' I . ,earne" ",e :;'\; ftÆ ' 1r, ,." ..':'. I meaning øf ' ., '. '. Id "': , '." . .., t " -C.// :{ "' '::::'::':: :: ljJt' IJ.:.:":: .: :,,Mt'- l' ........ "/,:: ',...,.... .5:<<::#<"",.,:.,....' &...... f' < A Ji, 'h,. rr.ci::. ",,';> .. ". "'\{ ....Wi : .::, ': In these shabby lodgings ordi- nary people live-likable people, weak people. Out oJ their inade- quacies and self..deceptions an atmosphere of suspicion is born and their peaceful existence slowly twists into a nightmare. At all booksellers. $2.50 By BERTON ROUECHE C{ \' ea er REYNAL & HITCHCOCK - - ... 't;,.A(t , '9iIIY' :,. -- 6J&,.f!-' ", ",' """,.--,,8'11 ' ^' . ,. "'I"t''''''''': "ri' " , .I.:.:': , . 'Ji l j :""""" 'r:' ., .' .:' % .: - 1tf . ,: _ ; .:: ';;.;. f ... '<:; <'@g" jWÆI.W .:. :w ",' ., ' L i1ti <. '" "Æ JÎi '"- ' c .i: i' .1: !.....iif.. . .. :;::::;. Not too sweeÞ-not too tart-just too good for words. If not obtain- able, write giving. your grocer's name. '\ ,... Crosse & Blackwell, ::::: ø Baltimore 24, Md. '., '&t# V . \. s. r'1" CROSSE & BLACKWELL ' ORANGE MARMALADE WITH THE FAMOUS ALL RED LABEL , .. )' '...',','. ,,:' ".: Ii! ." . ' ':?{}',:: ;.:);i 1 J .. I J HI :'" ...,.' ,'",.." '",:, '\' \h/;:, . 'D;; :: :;; : \' iff . :,: .n fU ',' :\í"',::..... fI J .. . x :?<:0 , t . . BOOK STORE 1091:' Le Conte Ave., Los Angeles 24" Calif. BR 21077 (Westwood Village) AR 39549 OPEN FRIDAYS UNTil 9:00 Order by Mail. California residents add 2 Yz % Sales Tax. Postage paid-anywhere in U. S. on books costing $1 or more. , SUY SONDS-GIVE SLooD